Measuring A Nation's Income
Measuring A Nation's Income
Measuring A Nation's Income
N. G R E G O R Y M A N K I W
PowerPoint® Slides
by Ron Cronovich
Macroeconomics:
The study of the economy as a whole.
For
For the
the economy
economy as as aa whole,
whole,
income
income equals
equals expenditure,
expenditure because
expenditure
expenditure, because
every
every dollar
dollar of
of expenditure
expenditure by by aa buyer
buyer
is
is aa dollar
dollar of
of income
income for
for the
the seller.
seller.
Households:
Households:
own
own the
the factors
factors of
of production,
production,
sell/rent
sell/rent them
them to
to firms
firms for
for income
income
buy
buy and
and consume
consume g&s g&s
Firms Households
Firms Households
Firms:
Firms:
buy/hire
buy/hire factors
factors of
of production,
production,
use
use them
them to
to produce
produce g&s
g&s
sell
sell g&s
g&s
CHAPTER 23 MEASURING A NATION’S INCOME 7
FIGURE 1: The Circular-Flow Diagram
Firms Households
includes spending on
• capital equipment (e.g., machines, tools)
• structures (factories, office buildings, houses)
• inventories (goods produced but not yet sold)
Note:
Note: “Investment”
“Investment” does
does not
not
mean
mean the
the purchase
purchase of
of financial
financial
assets
assets like
like stocks
stocks and
and bonds.
bonds.
CHAPTER 23 MEASURING A NATION’S INCOME 18
Government Purchases (G)
is all spending on the g&s purchased by govt
at the federal, state, and local levels.
G excludes transfer payments, such as
Social Security or unemployment insurance
benefits.
These payments represent transfers of income,
not purchases of g&s.
Y
Y =
= C
C +
+ II +
+ G
G +
+ NX
NX
23
A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 1:
Answers
C. Jane spends $1200 on a computer to use in her
editing business. She got last year’s model on
sale for a great price from a local manufacturer.
Current GDP and investment do not change,
because the computer was built last year.
In each year,
nominal GDP is measured using the (then)
current prices.
real GDP is measured using constant prices
from the base year (2002 in this example).
CHAPTER 23 MEASURING A NATION’S INCOME 28
EXAMPLE:
Nominal Real
year GDP GDP
2002 $6000 $6000
37.5% 20.0%
2003 $8250 $7200
30.9% 16.7
2004 $10,800 $8400
%
The change in nominal GDP reflects both prices
and quantities.
The change in real GDP is the amount that
GDP would change if prices were constant
(i.e., if zero inflation).
Hence, real GDP is corrected for inflation.
CHAPTER 23 MEASURING A NATION’S INCOME 29
Nominal and Real GDP in the U.S.,
1965-2005
Billions
$12,000
$10,000
Real GDP
$8,000 (base year
2000)
$6,000
$4,000
Nominal
$2,000 GDP
$0
1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005
33
A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 2:
Answers
2004 (base yr) 2005 2006
P Q P Q P Q
good A $30 900 $31 1,000 $36 1050
good B $100 192 $102 200 $100 205
50
Pakistan
40
Bangladesh
30
$0 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000
Real GDP per capita, 2002
GDP and Internet Usage in 12 Countries
60
Internet
U.S.
Usage
50
(% of
Japan
population)
40 Germany
30
20
China Mexico
10
Brazil
Russia
0
$0 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000
Real GDP per capita, 2002
CHAPTER SUMMARY
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures a
country’s total income and expenditure.
The four spending components of GDP include:
Consumption, Investment, Government
Purchases, and Net Exports.
Nominal GDP is measured using current prices.
Real GDP is measured using the prices of a
constant base year, and is corrected for inflation.
GDP is the main indicator of a country’s economic
well-being, even though it is not perfect.
CHAPTER 23 MEASURING A NATION’S INCOME 43